Playing Games with Ender: How Hollywood Ideology Destroyed a Classic

By |2015-05-19T23:05:42-05:00November 17th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Film|

Orson Scott Card’s science fiction classic, Ender’s Game is defined by moral ambiguity. A book about children, it is no children’s book. In it, six-year-olds already find themselves in military schools, fighting for the chance to enter the off-planet Battle School where they will leave behind all thoughts of family and home for round-the-clock military [...]

The Two Faces of Obamacare- Neither is Pretty

By |2014-12-29T17:23:36-06:00November 10th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Government, Politics|Tags: |

Have you seen the internet ads? “Get Covered America” is literally popping up everywhere with its smiling faces, its semi-anonymous endorsements for Obamacare, and its offers to “help you on your journey to get covered.” At least there is some honesty, there. Far from a point and click process, let alone the semi-automatic process promised [...]

Parties, Principles, and the Budget “Deal”

By |2014-12-29T17:44:33-06:00October 22nd, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Government, Politics|

[A political party is] a body of men united, for promoting by their joint endeavours, the national interest, upon some particular principle in which they are all agreed.– Edmund Burke All too many people in the mainstream press, and even among the Republican Party faithful, have been expressing extreme relief that Republican Party leaders “compromised” [...]

Whose Will Shall Rule?

By |2019-03-21T11:46:31-05:00October 15th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Constitution, Politics, Supreme Court|Tags: |

For decades, now, the universe of constitutional interpretation has been divided into “textualists,” who argue that the document must be read according to the reasonable meaning of its words, and those who argue for a “living” constitution, the meaning of which can “grow” over time to “meet the needs of a changing people and nation.” [...]

The Conservative Mind: A Book for the Next 60 Years

By |2014-12-29T17:47:56-06:00October 7th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism, Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind|

Russell Kirk (This is one of a series The Imaginative Conservative is publishing in honor of the sixtieth anniversary of Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mind. Essays in the series may be found here.) The Conservative Mind, by Russell Kirk It has been sixty years since The Conservative Mind burst onto the scene, garnering lengthy [...]

Night of the “Living” Constitution

By |2014-12-29T17:49:30-06:00October 1st, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Constitution, Politics|

Senator Ted Cruz’s 2013 filibuster did not do much to change the dynamic of politics in Washington or to stop the Affordable Care Act from becoming the last brick in the wall of social democracy separating Americans from their traditions of self-reliance and local community control. But, to someone interested in the constitutional basis of such [...]

“The Last Man”: Mary Shelley’s Despair

By |2021-08-29T22:22:36-05:00September 18th, 2013|Categories: Books, Bruce Frohnen|

In “The Last Man,” Mary Shelley writes with a tone of sheer hopelessness, bordering on nihilism. Must romanticism despair when facing our limited existence? Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein and paramour/wife to the poet Percy Shelley, wrote half a dozen novels during her lifetime, in addition to numerous essays and travelogues. The Last Man, the story [...]

Can a Generation Own the Earth?

By |2019-09-05T11:54:28-05:00September 10th, 2013|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Bruce Frohnen, Thomas Jefferson, Tradition|

“The earth belongs in usufruct to the living.” These are not Thomas Jefferson’s most famous words, but they are quite famous among students of politics. They have been used for generations to justify radical political change. And, like the soaring rhetoric of the preamble to the Declaration of Independence, these Jeffersonian words have gained him great [...]

The Good and Bad of Democracy

By |2019-08-22T11:22:39-05:00September 3rd, 2013|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Democracy in America|

I have been rereading Alexis de Tocqueville’s masterful Democracy in America.  This book, written in the first half of the nineteenth century by a French aristocrat for his countrymen, remains standard reading for American college students and even some of their professors. In a way it is too bad that we tend to read it [...]

Vindicating Jesus—in Court?!

By |2014-12-29T17:55:40-06:00August 26th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Christianity, Culture, Religion|

Here is a rather silly story, brought to my attention by The Imaginative Conservative’s own Stephen Masty.  It should tell us something about how very silly lawyers’ views of morals and the law have become in recent years. According to Religion News Service, among others, one Dola Indidis, a lawyer in Kenya, has petitioned the International [...]

Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Jacobin in King Arthur’s Court

By |2019-11-07T12:46:28-06:00August 14th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Fiction, Mark Twain|

Mark Twain, that teller of tall tales from the American frontier, has an almost mythical status in American literature and culture. The white suit, the wild hair, and the homespun humor have combined to add to his obvious literary skills a mystique that has spawned heroic portrayals in biographical one-man shows and works of fiction [...]

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